Looking at the map in your presentation, it seems like you have a big presence in Europe and USA! Come to Asia too!
Join and complete your quests. I completed mine.
For more visibility you need to build trust and transparency to community, all the best.
Sup Merlin,
Gotcha. Hopefully I’ll have some time later to take a look.
Maybe a link to a page that lays out the privacy and data sharing stuff simply for anyone curious about that during sign up… could be an experiment to see if drop offs decrease.
I was just mentioning that it keeps me from signing up, but I do that with any app that wants to know my location or device datas.
Hope all is well.
Sorry but I do not get that suggestion, as in the process of agreeing to privacy settings it is linked there on the spot, highlighted to click and see it in detail as an overview.
Has been like that from day 1.
I mean I am not defending or advising anything here, just want to point out the state.
Not sure if the app is temporally placed on hold as it’s not allowing me submit any details for nearby places I visit. The links aren’t functional, I am not using VPN which might affect it etc. It just stopped allowing me to collect & submit details for rewards. Any reasons???
Not really something that deserves to be called an app to begin with. It was very promising before they made an app that that looks worse than what students hand in for their bachelor exam. Quite obvious that they lack focus, and some VC in Borderless that is clueless about IoT networks pressed to release an app. Will not go anywhere before they consolidate.
Name one app in a similar field that looks and works worse, change my mind.
Thanks for the feedback though our app has been quite successful as a first experiment. It’s helped us triple our addressable base and it’s given us the insights to proceed to improve the experience and identify where to install sensors across retail locations. This was always about getting something out quickly and cheaply (so your comments are not wrong, just lacking context) to determine how we could use it as part of our hybrid DePIN approach, as well as to get folks to start earning points ahead of the airdrop while we launch. All the while maintaining focus on enterprise deployments like our deal with the Japanese Village Plaza announced at Breakpoint, one of a handful of deployments already completed that will be shared in the coming weeks. We’ve also made significant headway into the demand side, with a number of weather industry players sampling our air quality data ahead of commercial deals. And this is all on the cusp of migrating the legacy network this month as per our updated roadmap published last month (which we can’t update on our profile here because the LFG gives us errors whenever we try!), with a return to sensor sales and TGE in Q4. Investors love the progress we’ve been making and metrics we are capturing and validating. But more importantly, we know we are on the right path and that there is always a first step which not everyone will like. Whatever the case, we are focused on building a sustainable DePIN business. Follow our Twitter for the latest announcements.
If you consider the app to be quite successful with the added admission of it being a first experiment, it just makes me wonder if you have any perspective on apps to begin with.
Bring up one app in context (out of current 632 Web3/Crypto/Rating/Mapservice apps) or a similar field that looks and works worse.
Anything else in that reply is simply unrelated.
Getting something out quickly and cheaply, with all due respect AND added context, is a bit of a joke if students on a regular hand in better apps for their bachelor exam. (so it did not lack context I guess). Consider that such students usually invest around 2-4 weeks in these exam apps at best, go with no capital as a solo dev and are still considered amateurs.
The app is not even an app, it is a PWA so not much more than a website that can be altered in the sourcecode.
Naturally you have to defend what you did, but to anyone in the Web3 field, that actually uses apps it feels more than hollow.
What does PWA stand for? We’ll wait lol. What does a PWA allow you to do? To create TWAs to progress to native apps more quickly. What’s the best way to refine a product? By looking at usage data. We’ve had over 90K check-ins since launching on the 21st of August and recognize we have a long way to go. None of the other apps in market have been built or become a success overnight, and there is always a starting point. You may not like it, and that’s fine, but this is how apps are built and we know how we need to evolve it moving forward. Look forward to proving you wrong
None of the other apps in market have been built or become a success overnight you say?
No one was speaking about success however subjective you want to move to definition goalpost here.
The reality is that none of the other apps, at least those I brought into as comparison released in such a pathetic shape.
If someone wants to make an impact by releasing an app, he might better consider to release an app than a joke.
90K check ins are not much to brag about when it is airdrop incentivised and any other similar app by comparison pulls 10x these numbers.
It is not even about that I do not like it, but if you think that any user would like it, you are more disconnected than initially assumed. Your own users on Discord would prove any point here.
Calling it an app, is a far stretch already.
You can be a keyboard warrior all you want but we’re out here building. See you around.
Peak professionalism. I would also attack someone on the grounds of the severity of his arguments instead of countering them. It is always good to resort to personal attacks or insults, if your otherwise argumentatively unarmed.